Table 5.
Survey Item | Number |
---|---|
Benefits of expanded Medicaid (Yes/No for each) | |
— Improves families’ access to health care | 21 (95%) |
— Reduces the burden of uncompensated care on health care providers | 22 (100%) |
— Improves health for its beneficiaries | 21 (100%) |
— Helps families pay their medical bills | 21 (95%) |
Drawbacks of expanded Medicaid (Yes/No for each) | |
— It will overload the health care system, and may make it harder for other insured individuals to get needed care | 8 (36%) |
— It will foster dependency among beneficiaries | 3 (14%) |
— It will harm people by putting them in a flawed program | 1 (5%) |
Greatest barrier(s) to care for new Medicaid beneficiaries in your statea | |
— Lack of specialty providers who accept Medicaid | 11 (50%) |
— Churning or disruptions in coverage over time | 10 (45%) |
— Lack of primary care providers accepting Medicaid | 6 (27%) |
— Cultural or non-economic barriers | 4 (18%) |
— Inability to afford cost-sharing and copays | 0 (0%) |
— Restrictive managed care networks | 0 (0%) |
— Benchmark coverage may leave out important benefits | 0 (0%) |
— Barriers to care will not be a problem | 5 (23%) |
Impact of the primary care Medicaid payment increase for 2013–2014 on physician participation rates in Medicaid in your state | |
— No impact | 5 (24%) |
— Small impact | 14 (67%) |
— Large impact | 2 (10%) |
Officials were asked to select up to two options for this item.